The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 18, 1944, Page 12, Image 12

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TAGS TWELVE
Th OrJIGOII STATESMAN.. Solera, 1 Oregon. Tuesday Morning. July 13. 1SU
Where They Are What .
J ... ' ,3
t
Dudley . Bollock. F 2e. US navy,
spent a 15-day IeTe In June
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Bollock, 175 North Front
street. He la new at Fort Fierce.
In . an amphibioiu wait
where he Is training as aa
engineer . ... -, s 1.;-t..:.v:
' ' ' (Special to Tb Statesman)'
WITH US SOUTH PACIFIC
ARMY FORCES Staff Set James
.r. bump ox . aaiem, : ore., was
awarded the Oak Leaf cluster June
29 In lieu of an additional Air
Medal for meritorious achieve
ment while participating inius
.'tained combat operational missions
f a hazardous 1 nature . against
enemy opposition. - i
". Announcement of the award was
u T I v it
soon, commanding US army forces
in the south Pacific. .- . .
(Special to The Statesman) '
AS 7TH AAF BASE IN THE
MARSHALLS Nerdy V. Burris,
24, son. of Mr. and Mrs. Paul F.
Burris,! 1270 North Summer street,
w UAB MUfcCVT
Legal Notice
I PROCLAMATION
WHEREAS, the unregulated use
is, in my judgment a menace to
life and property on account of
the high fire hazard caused by an
excessive amount of inflammable
debris on the ground due to both
old and current logging opera
tions, old burns, and an excessive
number of snags, and . ;
WHEREAS, upon the showing
of the State Forester, it appears
to me to be necessary to close to
unregulated use the following area
designated as: -'I'--'"
i - Area No. 11-F v--
Linn County Area:
Starting at the Va corner com
mon to Sec. 29 and 32, T. 9 S.,
R. 4 EL, thence south 1 mile to
Vt corner common to Sees. 32, T.
S., R. 4 E. and Sec. 5, T. 10 S.,
R. 4 E.; thence west 7 miles to
S.W. corner Sec. 31, T. 9 S., R.
3 E.; thence north i mile to V
corner common to Sec. 36, T. 9 S.,
R. 2 E. and Sec. 31, T. 9 S.. .R.
.3 E.; thence west 3 milesl to
corner common to Sees. 33 and
34, T. 9 SM R. 2 E.; thence mile,
florth i to N.E. corner of Sec. 33,
T. 9 S., R. 2 E.; thence west -3
miles to N.W. corner of Sec. 31,
,T. 9 S., R. 2 E.; thence south 3
miles to S.K corner of Sec. 12,
T. 10 S., R. 1 E.; 'thence west
I mile to S.E. corner of Sec. 11,
T. 10 S., R. 1 E.; 'thence 1 mile
south to SJ5. corner of Sec. 14,
T. 10 S., R. 1 E.; thence 1 mile
west to S.E. corner- of Sec. 15,
T. 10 S., R. 1 E.; thence lvnile
south to S.E. corner of Sec. 22,
T. 10 S R. 1 K; thence 3 miles
west to S.E. corner of Sec. 19,
T. 10 R. 1 .; thence 3 miles
south to N.E. ' corner of Sec. 7,
T. 11 S., R. 1 E.; thence 1 mile
east to N.E. corner of Sec. 8, T.
II S., R. 1 E.; thence 2 miles south
to S.W. corner of Sec. 18, T. 11
S., R. 1 E.; thence 1 mile east to
N.E. corner of Sec 21, T. 11 S.,
R. 11; thence 2 miles south to
8.E. corner of Sec. 28, T. 11 S
R. I E.; thence 1 mile west to
S.E. corner of Sec. 29, T. 11 Sn
R. 1 E.; thence 1 mile south, to
S. X. corner of Sec-32, T. 11 S,
R. I .E.; thence 1ft miles west to
corner common to Sec. 31, T.
11 S., R.1E, and Sec , T. 12
S., R. I.E.; thence 1 mil south to
V corner common to Sees. 8 and
7, T. 12 S, R. 1 E.; thence
mile west to S. E. corner of Sec
1, T. 12 S , R. 1 W.; thence 1 mile
south to S.E. corner of Sec. 12,
T. 12 S., R. 1 W.; thence 1 mile
east to S.W. corner of Sec 8, T.
12 S R. 1 .; thence 1 mile south
to S.E. corner of Sec. 18, T. 12
R.1 E.; thence 1ft miles east to
y corner common to Sec 16 and
21, T. 12 S., R. 1 E.; thence 2
miles south to V corner common
to Sees. 28 and 33, T. 12 SL,
R. I.E.;, thence ft mile west to
S.E. corner of See 29. T. 12 S
R. 1 .; thence 1ft miles south to
y corner common to Sees. 4 and
p, i. id a., ri. i ju.; tnencc 4 miles
east to V corner of Sec. 1, T. 13
S R. 1 E.; thence south 5ft miles
to S.E. corner of Sec 38. T. lis
Sf m m h
R. 1 .; thence -1 1 mile west to
N.W. corner, of Sec. 1, T. 14 S.,
R. 1 E.; thence 1 mile south to
n. it., corner. oi aec iz. T i s
R. 1 E.;- thenc ft mile west to
y corner common to Sees. 2 and
It T. 14 S., R. 1 E.; thence 1 mile
south to Y corner common to
Sf 1l,a,nd A T' 14 s- R 1
thence 3ft miles west to S.E. r
r or &ec. 7, T. 14 S, R. 1 E.;
buciikc jiinf s souui 10 s., cor
ner of Sec 30. T. 14 S R. 1 E.;
thence 1 mile west to S. W. cor
ner of Sec 30, T. 14 S., R. 1 E.;
toence ft mile north to K cor
ner common to Sec 30, T. 14 S..
It l V.i thence 2 miles west to
t corner common to Sees. 26 and
a. HS,itiw.; thence south
lft miles to S.E. corner of Sea.
34, T. 14 S, R. I W.; thence 3
Tnues west to S.E. corner of See.
a- j.t t., . - w.: inence i
mile north to S. W. corner of
Eec. 23, T. 14 S, R. 1 W.; thence
4 miles west to S.W. corner of
Eec 7. T. 14 S.. R. 2 W.: thence
i mue north to s.w. corner of
r .c. 22, T. 14 S.. R 2 W.: thence
2 miles west to S.E. corner of
T;c 13. T. .14 S.. R 2 W.: thence
8 miles , south to S.E. corner f
f :c. 1?, T. 15 S., R. 2 W.; thence
1 m;! vest to S.W. corner of
; c. i;. T. 15 S., R. 2 W.: thence
I l nu'Ji to .V. cruer cl
They Are Doing '
ant Is pilot of a ' B-25 "Mitchell
bomber, the. "Shrapnel Bluest at
a 7th AAF base in the central
Pacific. "
Lt Burris is a graduate of Salem
high school and attended Fullerton
Junior college. He entered the air
corps February 20, 1942, and was
commissioned a second lieutenant
April 12, 1943. Last May he was
awarded the Air Medal with Oak
Leaf cluster for missions against
the Japs in the Pacific. A brother,
J. P. Burris, is a lieutenant in the
marine corps. '
, - t . - . . i i " '. '' : ' i
(Special to The Statesman) '
7TH AAF HEADQUARTERS,
Central Pacific Jack J. Billeter,
28, 685 Center street, Salem, Ore.,
has been appointed a warrant of
ficer Junior grade, 7th AAF head
quarters has announced.
Formerly a staff sergeant, Bil
leter was one of 32 enlisted men in
the 7th AAF to receive the appoint
ment and congratulations " from
Brig. Gen. Robert W. Douglass. jr4
commanding officer of the 7th A
AF. . , ,
Billeter'a wife is a resident, of
Salem, as are his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. F. Billeter, 743 Hood street
DarreU Weoldridg , MoMM. 2e,
who entered th nm tmm KalMm
and is now stationed on a'des trover
was a! visitor in Salem last week;
at the home of his uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs.. George Pro. His
mother. ; Mrs. W. C. Wooldridee.
and sisters, Wanda, Beverly ; and
Lillian, cam to Salem from Long
view, where they are current!-
residing, ta spend his brief leave
with him. Hit father, MoMM 1c
in the naval reserve, in in a naval
hospital outside continental United
States.
Cecil B. Billings, 18, fireman 1c,
was a member of the US naval
crew in the American assault force
which . invaded France. Young
Legal Notice
Sec 30, T. 15 S , R. 2 W.; thence
1 mile-west to S.E. corner of Sec
26, . T. 15 S, R. 3 W.; thence 2
miles south to that point where
Sec line joins boundary line be
tween Linn and Lane counties;
thence in an easterly direction
along the county boundary line to
corner common to Sec. 36, T.
15 S., R. 3 ., and Sec. 31, T. 15
S R 4 E.; thence north on pro
tection boundary line of Willam
ette National Forest to such point
where said Forest boundary line
intersects North Fork of Santiam
River; thence in a northwesterly
direction along south bank of the
North Fork of the Santiam River
to the north and south center line
of Sec. 29, T. 9 S., R. 4 E.; thence
south to point of beginning, ex
cent the following described areas
That strip lying . between the
coumy-roaa ana me vuartsvme
Branch of the Santiam River be
ginning at the western boundary
oi me ciosea area in section is,
Township 13 South, Range 2 East
and endinff at Parkers Onlrh- that
strip lying between the county
road and the South Fork of the
Santiam River beginning at the
western boundarv of the rlnMf
South, Range 2 EastLnd ending
at Cascadia: all of th ctato nark
area at Cascadia; that strip lying
Deiween we county road - and
Wiley Creek beginning at the
western boundary of the closed
area in Section 1 Tnwnshin ia
Soutn, Range. 1 East, and ending
a i we junction oi tug ana LJUle
Wiley Creeks; and that strip ly
ing between the county road and
the Calapooya River beginning at
a e western - Dounaarr of the
closed area in Section 31 Tnvm.
ship 14 South, Range 1 East, and
ending at the old Dollar Camp.
rnuuu ior entering tne above
area may be obtained at the fol
lowing places: .
Gates Side Camp
Thomas Patrol Station
Crabtree Guard Station
Sweet Home Guard Station
Linn County Tire Patrol Head
quarters, Lebanon
Crosgrove Ranch, Foster
Cascadia Fire Patrol Station
Courtney Creek Tire Patrol
Station
DeArmond Fire Patrol Station
Audy Ayers, La comb
NOW. THTrPTrvnPT? t tp tot
SNELL, Governor of the State of
Oregon by virtue of the authority
vested in m imH.
ions of Section 107-209, Oregon
vumiuTO biwi Annotated, as
.ujcuucu uj wuapier ijo, uregon
Laws 1941. Hn K.MK.
ie unregulated use of the above
ucKriQwi area to De unlawful and
thatsaid area shall be subject to
entry only through permit to be
issued by the State Forester or a
fire warden, under which permit
entrant shall comply with anr
and all of th. inZJina 71 ..??
ments: w"
(a) To build no fires except In
Places designated as safe in said
permit. . ..( .
(b) To have as a part of his or
iJ2menti. iooU uitabl for
extinguishing fire.
(c) To refrain from -smoking
except . in places designated , as
af e in said permit
s This proclamation shall be ef-
fecUve from and after th 19th
day July, 1944, and shall re-
SmS'1?, lorce d ect un
til the 31st day of December, 1944.
Done at the Capitol in Salem,
Oregon, this 17th day of July;
, EARL SNELL,
Attest: yJ- Governor.
ROBTl S, FARRELL, JR. .
Secretary of SUteT- July 18
:Pflc3.;-!n:i:rr!::i3
Fistula Fissure
nS other f . ' t
sod colon disord-
rs treated without :
loss of time, v ,
No HfpffAiiitloo I
Ho CooflBement i
- Quirk Kesoits
Immeoiate Belief
Call for examlna- '
0o or writ for 1"
FREE descripUv ;
booklet i
Dr.Dln::!'3G!:i!:
tHIKO-PROCTOLOlST
Conrt Liberty Sta. t aone
Sgt Alex M. Schmidt, 24, who
died . of ; wounds : received at
Biak Island, according to infor
matlon received by his family.
He was a member of Co. B
which became a part of the US
army in the fall of 1948V His
wife and 4-year-old daughter,
- Joan, live at f mi Oak street
Billings, son of Mr. .and Mrs. Lu
ther E. Billings,! route three, box
737, Salem, savf his first faction
with the enemy during the in
vasion. He .attended Salem, high
school and was employed Jy the
Oregon Pulp and 'Paper company
prior, to entering the service. His
brothe. Lather A. BOlinrx,' AMM
2e, is -;s stationed at San ? Diego,
Calif. - " I'u '4- ;
Fvt Paul Boynton ts spending
a furlough .with his wife and two
daughters at North .Bend and vis
iting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
i
i ' I 1 I ts : i : : ; . ....
-: j'i'wi X'.' M f fi F x,- .
iWhlAW V '.-.:
y i I fer s r7 -. t-&-w r j I
V. . '( . ... v . - . . ... . .- I v- r-' -. ... - t . . it --- i '
Thcrt arc only 5 things you can do with money
! spend it, lend fry invest it, bury it, or giVe it away. Froip
the standpoint of pleasure alone, anyone would , rather
j spend it Fot4 when you lend
7 something you might have
LJ Ca h tils ccsr.try, we offer people; compensation for '
lendiag or investing their money. Anyone jwho puts his ;
r money into toc!sn that produce goods forj everybody in-1
stead: cf spending it on goods for himself 'ii compensated
t.-iih i;:!crest or 'dividends.
Salem Chaplain
Abiding I? tilth
' (Special to The Statesman)
WASHINGTON, July 17 A
moving j s t o r y I fron Chaplain
Theodore B. Mitiner, ja native of
Marion ;i county; jOregon, a h d a
graduate of Willamette universi
ty, was received by the general
commission of army and! navy
chaplains here.- I- . -I
The story was ;in the nature of
a report from trie chaplain, for
merly a! student pastor at Harris
burg, Ore., and how chaplain of
a B-24 Liberator bomber group
in Italy. It cited ithis incident; f
' "One ' of our bg airplanes had,
A. M. Boynton of Brooks. Other
relatives visited include his sis
ters, Mrs." Floyd jVblkel f Salem
and Mrs. Joe Reniz of Brooks, and
his brother, 'James Boynton of
Vancouver, Washj, t '
- Pvt Boynton Has Just complet
ed a training coursd at C a m n
Croft SC, and he wil return Fri
day to Baltimore Mdi, for assign
ment , . J
4-
f
- IX Bam Kyle was wonnded
early in the Nortaandy -campaign
and is now in a) hospital in 'Eng
land, according tb informationare
ceived ; by . his .yifoj th former
Celia Moorman, j who is with her
parents in,MurtSaugh,i4daho.? f
i Lt Kyi is a son of Mr.-and
Mrs. O. B. Lyke of, Monro and
at th time of his - enlistment h
was practicing lfw in Bend. Both
h and his wifei are! graduates of
Willamette university. - i
He was leader of a machine
gun" platoon and was wounded, in
action -June 8
it you have to deny yourseif
bought .. .
i
1
t
i
I
-
s
0
I
0G
L ? -
A' A
t . . a - . .
i I
' ' f " r- ! - -.
0 n n n np n n;r
". i A '- A- 'A .
Citesl Pilots9,
hi 23rd Psalm
been so badly disabled by enemy
Cre that it was only through the
remarkable skill and perseverance
of the pilot :that ; the ship con
tinued its homeward light But
the ship could not be -landed s at
the home base for its controls
were shot ''away' UV ? f-:::-.-'
."The. pilot himself, nearing ex
haustion, aijied a fellow crew
member to read the 23rd Psalm
from the Testament they always
carried in the plane.
The psalm was read in its en
tirety. - Th plane was - taken to
higher altitude vwhere the crew
was ordered o bail out," and then
the pilot bailed out and let the'
empty plane frash at sea. AU the
men ""In. ; the Screw parachuted to
safety. '- z.Jl;-Hi?.&
. "Members bf the crew said to
me that night; fThat psalm helped
a Jot, and, the Great Pilot-was
surely riding! with us today.
Tb co-pUot added: 'He al
ways does."; ;
Molt to Leave Tonight t
For Seattle Hearing
Representative James W. Mott
after spending. two weeks athis
home here, will leave for Seattle
tonight .where he will, attend.' a
sub-commltto hearing on hir bill
to : reimburs local ; governments
for, taxes losVon propfrty, taken;
over by- the federal government
for military purposes : '
Next week Mott will accompa-'
ny the state ' highway commission,
on a tour of southern and central
Oregon . roads. .. .
'.Ti .. ?.:.'. :-k-.:-
aC .m.to that someone else can have the use of your
money. And when you invest it, all you have to show for
the things you didn't buy is a piece of property or a stock
certificate -which you can neither eat, wear, ride in nor
- sleep tinder. In other words,
, . .. ., .: .
i . .. V;
i
i
" S5 J ' "
tJ Fcr exsspit, 3175 individual Americans have
. financed Union Oil Company's "tools." Yet those "tools"
-make1 products for 40 times that many people. So if the
- company makes a profit, the 31,375 get dividends. Last year
these avenged $14173 per stockholder-owner . .
i pnrn7
Lieut. Van Ausdcll
Aids in Destroying
Four Nazi Planes r
WITH THE 15TH ARMY AIR
FORCE, Italy, July 17 First Lt
Perle D. Van Asudell, jrn .has
been in plenty of actions but he
believes his most outstanding was
as pilot of a P-51 Mustang over
Ploesti, Rumania, last ; April ,. 2 1. '?
" He was with an escort squad
ron i of Mustangs, .accompanying
heavy bombers, when the "Jer
ries" closed in. ' "'
. The 25-year-old son of Mr, and
Mrs. Perle D Van Ausdell of 336
Oak street! Salem," Ore, is cred
ited with a considerable contribu
tion in helping his squadron- de
stroy four of the enemy planes,
f Lieutenant Van Ausdell, a grad
uate of the Salem high school, has
flown more than 90 missions over
enemy-held territory of Germany,
France, Rumania, Bulgaria and
Italy, and holds the air medal
with eight clusters. : .
Salem Man Based on : ! .
Huge Shell Domain in -
African 7ar 'Theatre I
-. i .
v AFHQ, Mediterranean Theatre,
July '17 It. takes good men ; to
work in this north African ordi
nance battalion where ' shells I of
every; calibre arc held In readW
-- for-the rronta;'"-' f
On of thes Is igt Orlal R.
Sumner, grandson- of JUrsr Amelia;
Brown of of 555 'Marlon-street,'
Salem, Ore. ' " t;.. V. f.r"
" : The battalion commander, Ma j.
Thomas B. Lynch of San Fran
cisco, Califs says There,f very
little chance of even one . small
-:V&:A':.. A- CA--AC :
there's no reason to own. j.
.' - ; -v- ! I
shell exploding the way the men
handle the ammo. They treat it
lovingly and carefully so that it
will reach the front in A-l, condi
tion to give Jerry nightmares."
The battalion's domain covers
thousands of acres.
Lieut. Irish Wins
Air Bledal, Europe
' AN EIGHTH "AAF LIBERA
TOR STATION, England Sec
ond Lt . Robert W. Irish, 21, co
pilot of an Eighth AAF B-24 Lib
erator bomber has been award
ed the air medat The decoration
was - conferred for "meritorious
achievement while participating
in heavy bombardment missions
over, enemy .occupied; continental
Europe." -.
' He is the son' of Mrs.: G "N.
Irish of 2054 North Capitol street
Salem, Ore. Prior to his entry in
to the AAF in June, 1942, Lt
Irish attended the University of
Oregon. I ' " . ,
Aluminum "Workers , .
Wage Boost Justified
- PITTSBURGH, July 17
Counsel of nearly 50,000 employes
in 17 plants of the aluminum com
pany of America today told a war
labor board panel their demand
for a . 15-cent hourly wage, boost
is justified not only by rising liv
ing costs but also by requirements
bf postwar prosperity;" " v
"AU the technical blueprints for
streamlined.-:, conversion t methods
after the war will b meaningless
unless people have enough money
to buy goods which: industry can
produce," declared Benjamin Fish
er, a research director for the CIO-1
United Steelworkers of America.
...a chicken ranch or an oil
automobile factory for your own personal use. You could
buy all the eggs and gasoline and transportation you could
use in a lifetime for far less money. Tet someone has tb put
up the money to buy the hens and build the refinery and
put up the factory. - .
O ...$1.C3 fcr tzzh tzn cf stack owned in the com
pany. Of course, all "tools could be financed by the gov
ernment. But. we Americans have chosen our method
. because lt'preserves the freedom of -the individual, the
efficiency cf a free economy and that all-important human
incentive-ccwi7. ,- : u, .
r Vy '.A A ; J,-. A : f :f;AAk: iA ::;A Hr.
This series, sponsored by the people of Union Oil Company, is
dedicated to a discussion cf hove and tchy A merican business
functions. VtrekePeyc'UfcctfreehsmdMcnysuzcstions
crcriiZdztrisycx have to cSer. Write: The President, Union
C2Ccr.:pcr.y, Ur.bn 02 Lid., Lcs Ar.gdcs 14, California.
AMICICA'S FI'Tff FCZZDO.'.t IS f Kit INTECPCISI
25 Million Pieces
Of Service Laundry
Handled Monthly j
(Special to The Statesman)
1
FORT DOUG L A S, Utah-i
Laundries Jof the quartermaster
corps in the eight western, states
handle 22,000,000 pieces of cloth
ing each month, Ninth service
command , tabulations show. The
corps' 22 laundries are operated
in Washington, Oregon, Califor
nia, Montana Idaho, Nevada,
Utah and Arizona.; : "
The establishments also proc
ess reissue clothing returned from
the south Pacific and American
theatre of operation. ' 5
. The . Ninth service command
quartermaster' also operates three
dry cleaning plants where about
140,000 pieces axe processed
monthly.
-I
-Oil'
MAIL THIS "
COUPON TCOAY
CDCAK W. SaflTH
I CD Corbetf l.Miw
FOXTLAHD 4.0BECOM
; f MaWriU, car a yictam. i
AMraaa.
CJr
Pd. Adv.-Smlth for Senator Commltte -
Leo Smith. Mar. Corbett Bids.. Port
land. Ore. -.
refinery or stock in an
'''